Friday, May 6

Abia State Government Responds to Akpabio's Indictment on Commercializing Kidnapping

Chief Godswill Akpabio

Abia State government has berated Akpabio over his insinuation that the state made the act of kidnapping attractive to other states in Nigeria.

Abia State government has attacked the Senate Minority Leader and former Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Chief Godswill Akpabio, over a statement credited to him that kidnapping in return for money started in the state, Vanguard reports.

The government said that Akpabio’s claim was “erroneous and misleading.”

Akpabio was said to have made the claim, Wednesday, on the floor of the Senate while contributing to the debate on Joint Committee Report on Police Affairs, National Security and Intelligence.

A statement by the Chief Press Secretary to Governor Okezie Ikpeazu, Godwin Adindu said that Akpabio was trying to re-write history.

“This declaration by the Distinguished Senator is an attempt to re-write history whilst history remains constant. The most anti-human crime of kidnapping in all its ramifications, either for ransom or as a form of protest, remains a child of the Niger Delta. It was born and nurtured in the Niger Delta. It's roots go deep into the creeks.

“Kidnapping in other places was an off-shoot of the failure of the management of the Amnesty Programme, when non-indigenes who were recruited to the barter trade of oil in exchange for arms and hard currency were excluded from the national amnesty programme.

“The creek warlords had long started kidnapping for money before President Umaru Yar’Adua introduced the pacification and rehabilitation programme,” the stement read in part.